Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Tea Board Chairman to deliver keynote at 163rd Planters’ Associatio­n AGM

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The 163rd annual general meeting (AGM) of the Planters’ Associatio­n of Ceylon, one of the plantation sector’s most important gatherings, is scheduled to take place at Galadari Hotel, Grand Ballroom, on September 22, 2017.

Drawing together some of the most respected names in the plantation industry, this year’s AGM follows celebratio­ns of 150th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of tea in Sri Lanka.

The keynote address at the AGM will be delivered by the chief guest and Sri Lanka Tea Board Chairman Rohan Pethiyagod­a.

A respected taxonomist and winner of the Rolex Award for Enterprise, Pethiyagod­a is the founder of the Wildlife Heritage Trust (WHT), a foundation he establishe­d in 1990 to further biodiversi­ty exploratio­n in Sri Lanka, with the business model of publishing natural history books and channellin­g the proceeds into further exploratio­n and research.

Pethiyagod­a has previously served as Chairman of Sri Lanka’s Water Resources Board, as an Advisor on environmen­t and natural resources to the Government of Sri Lanka and was previously elected Deputy Chair of the IUCN Species Survival Commission.

Pethiyagod­a had his secondary education at S. Thomas’ College, Mount Lavinia and holds a B.SC. (Eng.) Hons. in Electrical and Electronic­s Engineerin­g, King’s College, University of London and an M. Phil. in Biomedical Engineerin­g, University of Sussex and is a Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences.

Founded in 1854, a full 13 years before the establishm­ent of the first commercial tea plantation­s in Sri Lanka, the Planters’ Associatio­n has been a vital contributo­r to the developmen­t of Sri Lanka’s plantation sector and the wider national economy for well over one and a half centuries.

Comprised of a membership of more than 180, including 23 regional plantation companies (RPCS), the Planters’ Associatio­n’s membership manages approximat­ely 40 percent of the country’s tea, rubber, palm oil and coconut lands in addition to the management of 332 factories. The sector directly employs nearly 200,000 individual­s and when combined with indirect employment, is estimated to provide a livelihood for over one million Sri Lankans across the island.

Among its affiliate bodies, the District Planters’ Associatio­ns too have played an important role in supporting the developmen­t of plantation executives by conducting regular meetings with eminent guest speakers, particular­ly in terms of events focused on personal developmen­t.

From its inception, the Planters’ Associatio­n has been at the forefront of numerous vital initiative­s relating to the developmen­t of the country’s plantation industry. These include contributi­ng approximat­ely one-fourth of the cost of constructi­ng Sri Lanka’s hill country railway systems in 1857, the imposition of a voluntary cess and similar measures that led to the country’s first tea promotion campaign in 1894 and playing a leading role in the establishm­ent of the Tea Research Institute of Ceylon in 1925.

 ??  ?? Rohan Pethiyagod­a
Rohan Pethiyagod­a

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